Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx just accepted President Obama’s nomination to be the next transportation secretary.
Before we get into the details of Anthony Foxx’s résumé and policy positions, let’s just take a moment to appreciate this: The White House has nominated a mayor to be secretary of transportation.
There is often a wide gulf between states and cities when it comes to transportation policy -- with cities preferring to invest in multiple modes while states mainly spend on highways. One way to interpret Obama's nomination of a mayor to head U.S. DOT is that he's casting his lot with cities. In Foxx, he's selected the chief executive of a southern city that has made significant progress on transit and walkable development the last few years.
“I know every mayor is thrilled today because one of theirs will become transportation secretary," outgoing Secretary Ray LaHood said at Foxx's nomination today. He said the appointment sent a message that “mayors count” and “cities count.”
"When Anthony became mayor in 2009, Charlotte, like the rest of the country, was going through a bruising economic crisis," President Obama said. "But the city has managed to turn things around. The economy is growing. There are more jobs, more opportunity. And if you ask Anthony how that happened, he’ll tell you that one of the reasons is that Charlotte made one of the largest investments in transportation in the city’s history."
Foxx has only been mayor since 2009, and the city was already heading in the right direction. Charlotte's light-rail system, LYNX, launched in 2007, and its complete streets policy won an award before he took office. But Foxx has also made his own mark.
As mayor, Foxx oversaw the extension of the city’s one light rail line, a project which will nearly double the Blue Line’s length and extend it to the UNC-Charlotte campus by 2018. He’s also been a champion for Charlotte’s downtown streetcar project, which currently consists of just a short starter line but which Foxx and local transit advocates want to turn into a 10-mile route in Center City to spur more walkable development. He hasn't been able to convince the City Council to support it, but the White House has supported the project to the tune of $25 million.
Foxx also seems to get the value of bicycling. Under his leadership, Charlotte has built out it bicycle network and begun a bike-share system. “During his tenure Mayor Foxx has been supportive of initiatives including an expansion the city’s bike route network, green bike lanes, bike boxes, sidewalk construction projects and other projects to meet bicycle and pedestrian needs,” Tobe Holmes, a board member at the Charlotte Area Bicycle Alliance, told the Alliance for Biking and Walking.
“He clearly understands the importance of biking and walking to creating a vibrant and economically successful community where businesses want to locate; where people want to live, raise a family and retire; and where people have a real choice of transportation modes,” said Andy Clarke, president of the League of American Bicyclists, in a statement.
LaHood, the man Foxx will replace, learned fast on the job and surprised everyone with his strong commitment to sustainable transportation and understanding of the connections between transportation, housing, and environmental policy -- connections mayors deal with every day. But LaHood wasn’t chosen for those qualities. In fact, in the beginning, few expected his tenure at U.S. DOT to go in the direction it did. He was chosen first and foremost because he was a Republican, as an overture across the aisle – an overture that clearly didn’t work.
Now Obama has chosen a rising star in the Democratic party whose city hosted the Democratic convention last year. And this rising star does come to the job “with a predisposition to seeing how transit can potentially transform a city that’s been almost entirely auto-dependent into one that’s more walkable and pedestrian-friendly and be a driver of economic growth,” said Joshua Schank of the Eno Center for Transportation.
“The choice shows an interest in continuing to focus on metropolitan transportation priorities,” Schank said.
Charlotte was the case study for a 2011 research paper on the impact of rail transit on obesity. Social scientists and health experts found that LYNX riders’ body mass index fell by an average of 1.18 points compared to those who didn’t ride the system, and were 81 percent less likely to become obese over time. Schank speculated that studies like that have helped open Foxx’s mind to the broader benefits of sustainable transportation, including the environment and public health benefits.
Still, Schank had been hoping the administration would put forth a technical expert this time around. President George W. Bush did that when he nominated Norman Mineta – a signal of bipartisanship, yes, but also someone with a resume in transportation policy.
“I think it is more of a challenge for a non-technical expert who’s not a member of the inner circle to have an influence on the White House,” Schank said. “Those are the two things we’d look for to see if there’s going to be a substantial change of policy.”
Schank expects Foxx – like LaHood – to be a loyal implementer of White House policy, not someone who goes above and beyond the administration's priorities.
Foxx's nomination will have to be confirmed by the Senate after a hearing before the Commerce Committee. Committee Chair Jay Rockefeller said he intends to formally submit Foxx's nomination and will announce soon the date of the confirmation hearing.